upstate29651 said:
Re-read my comment. In the 60's & 70's, WAPE 690 was THE station to listen to at the beach from Myrtle Beach down to Daytona. Yet, were advertisers sought outside of metro Jax? The answer is no. So, what was the monetary gain to broadcast out 50k watts to those areas? None. But they did it...and they do it today, which is why I openly wonder why NOW is the time to change things when it was a-ok for many decades.
Somehow I get the distinct feeling you are attempting to play devil's advocate, so if this is the case, I'll play along. Furthermore, I understood your comment during the first read so a second read isn't necessary.
With regards to your comment about WAPE not seeking advertisers outside the Jacksonville metro, the answer is quiet elementary and simplistic.
The cost associated with attracting advertisers outside the metro outweighs the monetary gain while, by your own admission, WAPE was
THE radio station to listen to along the beaches, the Big Ape generated more than enough ad revenue from its Jacksonville home MSA that it wasn't, and still isn't, necessary to seek advertising dollars outside its home metro.
As for its 50kw signal, this enhances and strengthens the local signal within the Jacksonville MSA and TSA giving AM 690 a far more superior local signal than it will have at 10kw or 5kw. As a result, the massive signal is used as a marketing tool to generate higher ad rates that it would not generate at a lower operating power while the higher power allows AM 690 to have superior building penetration that many of the other MSA AM stations does not have. This is the same basic principle Cox is using by moving its news-talk programming from the lower powered 106.5 FM to the bigger 100kw 104.5 FM signal. Coverage and building penetration is essential in addition to having compelling programming content, imaging, promotions and superior sales and marketing initiatives.
Lastly, this isn't 1965 any longer; therefore times have changed and what worked in the past doesn't always work well in the present. Likewise, what didn't work in the past sometimes "come of age" and work very well today.